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dc.contributor.authorDELLA PORTA, Donatella
dc.contributor.authorDONKER, Teije Hidde
dc.contributor.authorHALL, Bogumila
dc.contributor.authorPOLJAREVIC, Emin
dc.contributor.authorRITTER, Daniel P.
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-03T13:01:04Z
dc.date.available2017-10-03T13:01:04Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.citationLondon : Routledge, 2018en
dc.identifier.isbn9781138224179
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/48185
dc.description.abstractThe main aim of this volume is to develop a theoretical explanation of the conditions under which and the mechanisms through which social movements’ struggles for democracy end up in civil war. While the empirical evidence suggests that this is not a rare phenomenon, the literatures on social movements, democratization and civil wars have grown apart from each other. At the theoretical level, Social Movements and Civil War bridges insights in the three fields, looking in particular at explanations of the radicalization of social movements, the failure of democratization processes and the onset of civil war. In doing this, it builds upon the relational approach developed in contentious politics with the aim of singling out robust causal mechanisms. At the empirical level, the research provides in-depth descriptions of four cases of trajectory from social movements for democratization into civil wars: in Syria, Libya, Yemen and the former Yugoslavia. Conditions such as the double weakness of civil society and the state, the presence of entrepreneurs of violence as well as normative and material resources for violence, ethnic and tribal divisions, domestic and international military interventions are considered as influencing the chains of actors’ choices rather than as structural determinants.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- 1. Social movements in civil wars : an introduction, Donatella della Porta -- 2. Causal mechanisms in civil wars : a sensitizing map, Donatella della Porta -- 3. Beyond Syria : civil society in failed episodes of democratization, Teije Hidde Donker -- 4. The failure of Libyan political transition and the descent into civil war, Emin Poljarevic -- 5. Yemen’s failed transition : from peaceful protests to war of ‘all against all’, Bogumila Hall -- 6. Yugoslavia : from social movement to state movement to civil war, Daniel P. Ritter -- 7. Social movements, democratization, and civil wars : some conclusions, Donatella della Portaen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherRoutledgeen
dc.titleSocial movements and civil war : when protests for democratization failen
dc.typeBooken
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